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How Nirbhaya rape case points to India's deep-rooted problem with women

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How Nirbhaya rape case points to India's deep-rooted problem with women

By Ravi Agrawal, CNN

New Delhi (CNN)There's crime and then there's evil, pure and simple.

By any standards, the events of December 12, 2012 can only be described as evil -- the very worst depravity our race is capable of.


Six men repeatedly raped a woman; they treated her like a crazed dog would ravage a toy doll, beating, poking, piercing. The injuries were so severe the victim's internal organs were damaged beyond repair. Then they threw her away to die.

Police say one of the rapists hanged himself in prison. Four others got the death sentence. There was one more rapist, a young man just months short of his 18th birthday. He didn't know it then but that small quirk of timing would end up saving his life. He's now a free man, let off by the legal system.

Why?

Indian juvenile law states the maximum sentence for any juvenile can be no more than three years -- no matter the severity of the crime. No matter the fact that he is now nearly 21 and by a number of accounts in the media has shown little remorse for his actions.

Read: Where have India's females gone?

For many Indians the release of the juvenile rapist re-opens three-year-old wounds. The letter of the law was followed but it doesn't feel like justice was delivered.

The case also re-opens the painful questions: Is India doing enough to protect women? Is it creating a strong enough deterrent for crimes against women? What's changed since that awful day in 2012?

What's changed?

According to Kirti Singh, a human rights activist and lawyer, "the entire body of laws around sexual assault has changed" in the country's Supreme Court, making India's laws tougher than those of most other countries.

India's 2013 Criminal Law Amendment Act broadens the definition of rape to include any form of penetration; it lists out strict punishments not only for rape but also for sexual assault, voyeurism, and stalking.

Read: Parents in painful fight to continue daughter's story

"The process began before 2012," said Singh. "But the 2012 gang-rape case hastened the legal changes."

Singh also pointed out how fast-track courts can now hear rape cases -- but there aren't enough of them across the country.

Perhaps the greatest fallout from the 2012 rape is how India has begun talking about rape: on TV, in the papers, in public. It no longer feels like rape is a taboo issue. Quite the opposite, in fact: following the news in India invariably means hearing about gruesome stories of sexual assault from far flung corners of the country.

According to India's National Crime Records Bureau36,735 rapes were recorded in 2014-up some three-fold since 2012. 28% of the reported cases turned into convictions.

The rise in the number of reported rapes is sometimes interpreted as there being more rapes taking place. The truth is we don't know. Unlike other crimes like stabbings or shootings, rapes rarely get reported. It's more likely that the sharp increase in reported cases comes from a national awareness about the crime, the importance of reporting it, and a sense that the law can punish offenders.

There are other, smaller steps authorities have been pushing. Delhi's police have installed GPS trackers on public buses and auto rickshaws, in the hope of deterring would-be rapists. And as more Indian women get access to smartphones, they'll be able to let their family and friends track their whereabouts any time they feel unsafe.

Deep-rooted problems

Singh pointed out that India's problems with rape can't simply be fixed by tighter laws.

"As a society we have had a fire-fighting response," she said. "Calls for revenge and retributive justice can ensure would-be criminals don't have a sense of impunity but it doesn't fix all of our problems."

Read: Challenges of being a woman in India

India is ill-equipped to process not just sexual assaults and rape, but all kinds of crime, says Singh who noted that India has a shortage of forensic laboratories. To add to that India has one of the worst police-to-citizens ratios in the world and far fewer lawyers and judges than it needs to process cases.

That's just infrastructure.

There's an even deeper set of problems for India to come to grips with: how women are treated in general.

According to the World Economic Forum's 2015 Gender Gap report, India ranks 108th in the world for the opportunities it gives women. India's women rank 136th in the world for labor force participation; 127th in the world for their literacy rate; 115th in the world for representation in parliament.

It all starts at the very beginning.

India ranks 143rd of 145 countries for its female-to-male sex ratio. What this means is that Indians continue to prioritize male children, often aborting female ones repeatedly.

Indian society tends to have some of the worst excesses of patriarchy. Marriage dowries continue to be demanded and received. Boys grow up basking in the knowledge that they are special. Given all these discrepancies, is it really a surprise that India has a bad reputation for the way it treats women? And is it really a surprise that women don't feel safe?

What Nirbhaya rape case says about India - CNN.com
 
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Six men repeatedly raped a woman; they treated her like a crazed dog would ravage a toy doll, beating, poking, piercing. The injuries were so severe the victim's internal organs were damaged beyond repair. Then they threw her away to die.

the thinking behind that is the same as the thinking in this[1]...
Indian abortion Doctors are feeding female foetuses to dogs to cover up rampant infanticide by parents who prefer boys, it has been revealed.

The sickening practice was exposed in the town of Beed, in Maharashtra - the state with the worst child sex ratio in the country.
By keeping dogs, doctors can get rid of bodies without having to dispose of them through official channels.

It means that the true extent of illegal sex-selection abortion in the town - and elsewhere in India - is being hidden

The shocking revelation was made by Varsha Deshpande of Lek Ladki Abhiyan, a charity working against the practice.

She claimed her organisation had conducted a sting operation Dr Sudam Munde in 2010, in which he openly talked about how he was aborting female foetuses and feeding them to his five dogs.
It was then that the police had arrested him, but he was released soon and continued with his activities.

'A person even saw a foetus being fed to the animals,' Deshpande said.
Health minister Suresh Shetty

Admission: Health minister Suresh Shetty revealed he's heard of Beed doctors feeding foetuses to dogs

Suresh Shetty, the public health minister for Maharashtra - India - second most populous state - also admitted he had heard of foetuses thrown to the dogs in Beed.

Deshpande added: 'This is known to everyone in Beed, but the police are not taking action as Munde influential.'


or the same as the thinking behind this[2]...
The parents of the Delhi woman who was allegedly killed on Sunday for marrying outside her caste have confessed to having strangulated her to death.
She reportedly had an argument with her parents where she reasoned that she was legally married and could not marry again.

Sources revealed it was Bhawna’s mother who took the lead in beating up her daughter, insisting they should “end the matter”. She then strangulated her daughter to death, while the father held her by the feet.
The parents also reportedly told police that after Bhawna died, they cooked up a story. “The parents then called their relatives in Alwar to tell them a snake had bitten Bhawna and they were bringing her to the village for treatment,” police said (see report from Alwar, right).


but really, it is not as if males escape injustice, exploitation and oppression in india... india as a society has not gone much beyond the backwardness, extreme capitalism and reactionary attitudes that existed prior to 1947.

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[1] Female foetuses in Beed fed to dogs to hide evidence | Daily Mail Online

[2] ‘Father held Bhawna by the feet, mother choked her to death’ | The Indian Express
 
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I thank Pakistanis to remind us of our backwardness and that feeling and wish, if we were ruled by progressive Pakistanis then life would have been so different and beautiful.

:cray:
 
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first of all its a bit ironic that a pakistani is posting this.

second this is a very wrong and one sided view that many indians have, reality is men have it a lot worse, its just not highlighted as much by the media


 
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India doesn't have a problem with women.
We had a lady PM in 1970s. Can America, China or Russia make such claims?
But like other south Asian countries, women in India do not get the respect they deserve.

RIP Jyoti Singh!
 
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India doesn't have a problem with women.
We had a lady PM in 1970s. Can America, China or Russia make such claims?
But like other south Asian countries, women in India do not get the respect they deserve.

RIP Jyoti Singh!

Wu Zetian, she was Empress of China several millenia ago. :partay:






wu-zetian.jpg
 
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What can you expect from a nation that has democratically, under no force or coercion, has elected a Hindu Extremist Government to power.

Shame India... agar Hinduo kay paas thori si bi sharam-o-haya hoti.
 
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What can you expect from a nation that has democratically, under no force or coercion, has elected a Hindu Extremist Government to power.

Your country have been electing Islamists to power for the last 68 years,heck the founding principle of your nation is Islamic nationalism.
 
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